The Hellenic Navy maintains a large number of surface vessels and submarines in its inventory. However, the vast majority of warships in active service are in the process of either being replaced by more modern and advanced designs, being refurbished, or being retired. The Navy is awaiting delivery of three FDI Belharra frigates from France with an option for one more after the
Greek Prime Minister announced the purchase from Greece of four new
multirole heavy frigates in September 2020, that will replace older
Elli class vessels. Deliberations with other parties, including the United States and Germany, lasted for months after France was eventually awarded the contract. He also announced the immediate upgrade of all four
Hydra (Meko-200HN) class frigates, already in service. Greece has also signed on to a program between Italy and France in making a new multirole heavy corvette, with Spain joining as well. The program, dubbed the
European Patrol Corvette, has also been inserted in the EU's so-called
Permanent Structured Cooperation. Naviris expected the EU fund to issue a Request for Proposal for projects in 2020, with proposals to then be submitted by industry in 2021, and for decisions on fund allocation to be made the same year. Also, plans for the Hellenic Navy to acquire the
Sa'ar 72 Israeli corvette of the new
Themistocles class came to fruition after an agreement signed in June 2020, with exclusive production in Greece.
Frigates and heavy corvettes , revealed at the 2016 Euronaval exhibition and proposed by
France. Frigates are the main heavy ships of the Navy, with 70% of the
Hydra class frigates having an advanced anti-aircraft missile launching system. However, there is no dedicated
Anti-aircraft Warfare (AAW) platform in the fleet since the
Charles F. Adams class destroyers were decommissioned in the late 90s. The oldest ship in the frigate fleet is over 45 years old (
HS Kountouriotis, commissioned in 1978) while the youngest ship is over 25 years old (
HS Salamis, commissioned in 1998). None of the ships was equipped with a
remote weapon station (RWS) for the purpose of asymmetric warfare and coastal defence and the
electronic countermeasures systems (ECM) were absent or obsolete.
Raytheon has now installed new electro-optical systems on the ships that were previously not equipped with such sensors.Plan for the
Hydras is to extend their operational lifespan well into the 2030s. However, the
Elli class frigates need to be replaced by new designs. The acquisition of two, with an option for two more,
Naval Group FDI Belharra frigates with high-end AAW and deep missile strike (DMS utilising
Scalp EG Naval) capabilities from France was put on hold in July 2020, despite an intense interest initially expressed by the Navy. Main reasons for this policy change by the Greek Government, were reported to be the increased cost of almost €3 billion for only two units, the exclusion by the French of co-production and the delayed delivery of the first unit, placing it in 2025 at the earliest. Meanwhile, the
United States had proposed the acquisition of four
Multi-Mission Surface Combatants (Freedom class MMSCs), also known as
Littoral combat ships, that are already in full production for
Saudi Arabia, also tested and in use by the
US Navy. The Germans came to the table with the Meko-A200 design, a new and advanced version of the Meko-200HN, that could additionally offer homogeneity to the fleet, especially after the upgrade of the ships already in service. On November 6, 2020, the Navy submitted its initial preference for the acquisition of 4 MMSC Littoral Combat Ships developed by
Lockheed Martin. These multi-mission frigates were part of a wider package discussed with the US, that also included upgrade of the four
Hydra frigates, intermediate solution ships, and participation of
Hellenic Shipyards in the development of the new American FFG(X) type frigate. The FFG(X) type frigate, now named , is a multi-mission guided-missile ship, under development for the
United States Navy by
Fincantieri Marinette Marine. However all other proposals, also including those from the Netherlands, the UK, Spain and Italy, remained on the table pending closest evaluation of the packages offered by all participating companies. The final decision by the
Greek Government on the type and country of origin of the new Hellenic ships, was scheduled for 2021. Final decision was made in September 28 of 2021 and after many months of deliberations. During his visit to the French capital and his meeting with President Emmanuel Macron, Greek Prime Minister
Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced the procurement of 3+1 French FDI-HN Frigates and 3+1 Gowind-HN class Corvettes in a €5 billion deal spreading to 2026, with the later class still being configured to meet the Hellenic Navy's needs. It is almost certain that two types will replace the
Ellis, in order to maintain a ceiling of at least ten frigates/corvettes. A floating scenario was the purchase of heavy corvettes to replace a number of old
Ellis. This scenario has become increasingly more possible, after Greece joined
Italy and
France in the
European Patrol Corvette (EPC/PESCO) consortium in early 2020 for the construction of a new advanced 3,000 ton corvette, with
Spain joining the program as well. New ships, for all involved Navies, are not likely to enter service before 2027 or 2030 at the earliest.
Submarines Greece maintains a mixed fleet of modern and older submarine units. In December 2019, the
Hellenic Ministry of Defence resolved a lingering issue, regarding the new
Type-214 (Papanikolis class) torpedoes. An order for new multipurpose heavyweight
SeaHake Mod4 torpedoes, from
Atlas Elektronik, was placed. The contract also included the upgrade of older torpedoes and the purchase of new torpedo batteries. The six older and non-modernized Type-209 units (
Poseidon and
Glavkos classes) will be gradually retired, without any replacement announced yet. The optimistic scenario is replacement with four additional Type-214s, reaching a ceiling of eight units of this type. By 2030, the recently upgraded Type-209/1500 AIP (HS
Okeanos, former Type-209/1200) will have exceeded 50 years since entering service; therefore it is questionable whether it will still be part of the Greek fleet by that time.
Other surface combatants There were two new
Roussen class
Fast Attack Missile Craft (FAMC) under construction, bringing the number of vessels of this type up to seven; The 6th ship was commissioned operational in July 2020, with the seventh and final ship expected Autumn 2020. This was after a more than ten-year delay due to financial and structural problems faced by
Elefsis Shipyard that was contracted to build the ships. There are no changes in the initial design, despite 20 years since the first vessel in the class entered service. The majority of the FAC were built in the late ‘70s. Four of them have been modernised extensively and the new ships have integrated all updates. All older vessels of other types, with the exemption of three
Votsis class boats which are about to be retired soon with the introduction of the new
Roussens, have replaced their old MM38 and Penguin missile systems with Harpoon launchers. In addition, the boats that had no electro-optical tracking (Mirador) sensors, received new endogenous Miltech TDR-10A and TDR-300 systems. The fleet also consists of ten
gunboats. With the exception of the four
Machitis class (Osprey HSY-56A), the rest of the gunboats need modernization and, some of them, replacement. The two
Asheville class boats are at least 50 years old. The remaining four boats (Osprey-55 and HSY-56) have already received new electro-optical systems. On June 16, 2020, [https://www.onexsyrosshipyards.com/ ONEX Neorion Shipyards SA in the Greek island of
Syros and
Israel Shipyards LTD signed a cooperation agreement for the construction of the
Themistocles class corvette during Greek PM's visit to
Israel. This is a multipurpose warship based on the Israeli
Sa'ar 72-class corvette design, at 72 meters length and displacement of around 800 tons. It will be able of speeds above 30 knots with an extended endurance. It can operate a medium size marine helicopter, but also supports unique possibilities of deploying Special Forces units. The agreement was for the construction in Greece of seven vessels, with an option for six more. These will replace an equal number of older gunboats. In February 2020, at a special event held at the Hellenic Institute of Naval Technology (HINT), the technical director of the Unit of Submersibles and Hellenic Navy Works of
Hellenic Shipyards Co., presented project
Aginor. The project was the development and construction, in collaboration with the Navy, of an advanced
Asymmetric Warfare Vessel (AWV) that uses the latest technologies and composite materials. The first vessels have already been added to the Navy’s fleet. They are capable of a number of missions including insertion and extraction of Special Operations Forces, interdiction and coastal patrol, as well as search and rescue (SAR) operations. In April 2020 the Navy received the first four
Mark V Special Operations Craft, ordered via the United States
Excess Defense Articles programme. The craft are utilised by the
Underwater Demolition Command.
Aircraft In 2019, the U.S. State Department cleared a $600 million foreign military sale (FMS) of seven
MH-60R Seahawk multi-mission helicopters to Greece. In July 2020, Greece signed a contract for the purchase of four new units, via this program. In November of the same year, the remaining three aircraft were also included in the order. A decision was made in 2014 for the re-activation of existing
Lockheed P-3B Orions and their submission to a program of overhaul, upgrade and service life extension. The contract with
Lockheed Martin included the return of one aircraft to airworthy condition with the existing mission equipment as an "interim solution" and the complete modernization and upgrade of four other aircraft in
Hellenic Aerospace (HAI). The option included the complete modernization and upgrade of that aircraft as well. The "interim solution" aircraft has already been delivered, while all the remaining aircraft are expected to be delivered by 2023. The Hellenic Navy will soon begin the use of
Schiebel Camcopter S-100. This unmanned helicopter is able to take-off and land on warships and will be deployed on FDI frigates. 4 systems (8 vehicles) were ordered in February 2026. ==Chain of command==